I like how Andy is pretty open about his services to the guards but at the same time is only too well aware of the dangers of getting too friendly with the guards which is why he says he wouldn't exactly call them friends. That's why he went through all the trouble he did to get a new library for the prison and helped some prisoners pass their GED exams. Balance out the services he provides for the guards and the prisoners. That's why he's such a great character. He suddenly stops feeling sorry for himself over the shit situation he's in and realises he can use it to help people and help convicts stay out of prison in the future. He's like Brooks. He becomes important behind the walls.
Thats a good interpretation! It would also more explain the radio thing,when he played it over the intercom! He took the chance to show ALL the inmates,that he WASNT friends with the guards and would do something for the inmates,even if it means going against the guards and getting 2 weeks in the hole!
@@SomeDude84 No. I'll keep doing it. Know why? Because I like doing it. As do many others. Many people enjoy reading deeper analysises of movie scenes. You don't enjoy it? Just keep bloody scrolling then.
The film has a gift for humanizing otherwise intimidating people. The prisoners and the guards both start off as off-putting yet they all have their softer, more vulnerable sides exposed by the end.
@@mustofamiah8549 Hadley wasn't as bad as the Warden I think he was just corrupted by him and following orders. He still scratched Andy's back after he got beaten by the Sisters.
"I'm a convicted murderer who provides sound financial planning" out of context is lowkey hilarious. Just another great line to appreciate from this masterpiece.
This movie, especially when a guards asked his advise on setting up trust fund, inspired me to become an accountant in 1995. I took a diploma in accountancy course then. This shows, if you have a set of skill, you will be respected, wherever you are.
I just noticed when red narrates this, he goes through years like nothing. “Year after that” and “year after that”. It’s kinda sad to remember how much of Andy’s life was taken away for something he didn’t do. But it doesn’t hit you until about twenty years in, before he finally breaks free.
My whole life been way im used it I guess u can say and there nothing I want I can achieve or gain through working or skill so I can only work for other goals and pray for mine
Fun fact: Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Paul Newman, Gene Hackman, Robert Redford and Robert Duvall were considered for the part of Red. In the original novel, Red is a middle-aged white Irishman with graying red hair. However, Frank Darabont always had Morgan Freeman in mind for the role, because of his authoritative presence, demeanor, and deep voice. Red's reply, "Maybe it's because I'm Irish," to Andy's inquiry about his nickname was kept in the film as a joke.
And honestly could you imagine anyone else narrating this? Like the scene before this, "We sat on the roof with the sun on our shoulders and felt like free men." Just perfect.
Its Morgan Freeman's narration that elevates this movie from great to perfection. he brings a deep sombre tone, and really evokes the feelings he speaks. You can really feel Red's deep sorrow and regretfulness about his life. I don't think any other actor could come close.
I am Korean and I haven't fully understood why they need Andy to do their taxes until I came to the US and do my taxes for the first time. Now I have to look for Andy every single year.
Until you watch Young Sheldon and realize it takes a genious to get well versed in the tax code. The fact that they call it code, instead of rules says it all.
This scene inspired me so much that I got my accounting degree and deliberately went to prison so I could do taxes for all the guards. I just got out after 20 years AMA
I wouldn't say Boggs 'volunteered' he wanted to do it because he's a scumbag rapist. Though after that if anyone laid a finger on Andy I'm guessing Hadley would have killed them instead of just leaving them permanently disabled and drinking the rest of their food through a straw.
What a cinematic masterpiece! - An absolutely fantastic movie from start to finish: The stellar acting from Freeman and Robins, the phenomenal script and incredible direction from Darabont, hauntingly beautiful score from Newman and the gorgeous cinematography of Deakins - not to forget Stephen King's amazing novel as the source material.. God damn I love this movie so much..
Thing to remember is, having an accountant who can put all your ducks in a row to maximize your money, that's a thing only rich men get, or at least upper-middle class. Prison guards were- still are - predominantly blue collar. Andy is opening up a whole other world to them.
Imagine coming back the year after Andy escaped. Guard: yea I’m here to do my taxes. New warden: Andy escaped, the last warden shot himself, and the old guard is practicing sodomy. Guard: okayyy... guess I’ll go to H&R Block.
@@OBroIchain I think so. The state would’ve been prey embarrassed over the whole thing and wouldn’t risk going easy on him as further PR disaster would follow.
Andy played the long game. Also he did something that would keep himself occupied while serving time. Time and nothing to do is dangerous to your health.
in real life, every perv and bad guy in that prison would've left Andy alone the minute he helped out Hadley with his windfall. And then after this? Forget it. Him and his crew are UNTOUCHABLE. I mean to the point where cons would be doing them favors and protecting them. To say nothing of the extra privileges they'd all get; good work assignments, food, women, a beer once and a while you name it. The prison would be pretty orderly actually. Oh, Red was helping Andy with the taxes 2-3 months out of the year with that many guards.
@BethHarmon-uv7tl Andy's rep would've been established LONG before that. And definitely Bogs's buddies would've gotten the same treatment from Hadley LOL.
Damn it, I love this movie. Every scene is memorable. Andy's sentencing, Red's parole rejection(s), the tax scene, all of it. As close to perfect as it gets.
@@atiashaunbaker3792 they mentioend andy was in shawshank from 1947 to 1966 so 19 years. we know later on in the movie by th 1950s or early 1960s andy was already helping the warden embezzle money by that point in time. would he even have time to still do the taxes for the other guards.
This is one reason why they beat Bogs half to death, after he beat up Andy. The Guards and the other Prisoners like him a lot and he is extremely useful to them.
I think initially Andy thought he might be in for a beating for no reason, then had to get himself together mentally after realizing that was not what he was there for.
i think an issue was that the guards didnt make it clear which inmates they can touch or cna't touch obviously to avoid favoritism but there are inmates probably stupid enough to not get the memo and carry it out.
Yeah I'm not sure if Boggs had beaten him within an inch of his life at the time of this scene continuity wise. It would have been around that time, but not sure if before or after. As for getting the word out, I have no idea how a prison operates to tell inmates to keep your hands off this prisoner. Like I suppose if Andy told the Warden or Hadley about the Sisters to keep their hands off Andy it may have worked, but Boggs was pretty stupid.
Lol not to be the downer here but love how they fix finance with accounting… two different things guys !! Wait till I tell the fellas about this oh boy
Shawshank redemption is not a prison movie. Its deep theme is related to Bible. Say, Andy is Jesus, Norton is a fatherly figure and Hadely is a Satan. Fear helds you prisoner, hope sets you free is the most perfect line that explains the psychological aspect of human morale.
i've always wondered would these guards have so many complicated things to file for taxes? i mean w2 that's obvious. maybe some 1099 from banks for interest earned. that's all i can really tihnk of on the passive side. unless they 're all investing in something like stocks or bonds or they got side businesses. but don't they work long hours would they even have time to do all that other stuff.
@@minhajnizam5090 i don't know how it was in teh 1950s but obviously today you just get all the 1099s in the mail from the instittuion you got money with or the place you made money at.
I once watched an episode of kids meet. Where they met former criminals. One of them said he learned he liked to write so he wrote books. Sometimes you need some time to focus.
In hindsight, this is also what likely informed Andy of everyone's activities. You can tell a lot about someone by their finances and Andy was in deep with the Warden and more or less had the read on him when he was planning his escape. He had to make sure that the Warden couldn't actually check his investments in the window that he escaped. The funny part is that the Warden more or less didn't catch on to the heist until the time of his demise because he only just found the bible when it showed up in the news.
How would the guard write off his gun + holster as tax deductable? Ya he had to pay for the gun + holster himself, but that means the prison would have to issue him a receipt as proof of payment right?
They would have if he paid the money. It's not like it was done under the table. He had to purchase the weapon and holster for the purpose of doing his job, that makes it a business expense.
I find it funny how the warden is worrying about his taxes when later on at the end of the movie he just shoots himself I mean it seems kinda pointless now
too bad Ritchie Aprile couldn't have had Andy do some money cooking for him so that when he got out of prison, he wouldn't have had to take orders from Tony Soprano
There were corruptions inside the prison, so yes that's one half of the reason. The other reason is because Andy was setting their tax practically for free, which saves them a lot of money.
@@brahmantyoihsan5938 i think you'd have to be higher up to really see kickbacks and such. obviously the rank and file may have set up some gravy trains for themselves but i think the free tax services would definitely be the biggest draw. you have a free CPA in house.
@@joeswanson733 Well, yeah, especially since a man of Andy's education wouldn't normally find themselves in prison. But having a CPA do your taxes in exchange for giving him a little more freedom and safety? Those guards should be wearing colors themselves if only because they were too cheap to buy Andy a chessboard.
I love Andy and how he explains things as well as plan out things (as seen throughout the film and especially its ending lol). Seeing this movie makes me want to relive the moment I watched it.
I like how Andy is pretty open about his services to the guards but at the same time is only too well aware of the dangers of getting too friendly with the guards which is why he says he wouldn't exactly call them friends.
That's why he went through all the trouble he did to get a new library for the prison and helped some prisoners pass their GED exams. Balance out the services he provides for the guards and the prisoners. That's why he's such a great character. He suddenly stops feeling sorry for himself over the shit situation he's in and realises he can use it to help people and help convicts stay out of prison in the future. He's like Brooks. He becomes important behind the walls.
Get busy living or get busy dying, so to speak
Thats a good interpretation! It would also more explain the radio thing,when he played it over the intercom! He took the chance to show ALL the inmates,that he WASNT friends with the guards and would do something for the inmates,even if it means going against the guards and getting 2 weeks in the hole!
@@SomeDude84 No. I'll keep doing it. Know why? Because I like doing it. As do many others. Many people enjoy reading deeper analysises of movie scenes. You don't enjoy it? Just keep bloody scrolling then.
@@METALLICARULES11 , keep doing it. We all love deep thoughtful analysis like yours.............and by the way HAPPY NEW YEAR 2022 in a few hours.
business is business. friendly, but not friends.
I love how Andy says, "So, Mister Dekins," as he sits down with the guard. Almost like he's back at the bank meeting a new client.
Do you also do that at the bank meeting?
@@AboveBellow No. I just thought it was appropriate for Andy, since he was a banker before he went in the can. A bit of normalcy for the poor guy.
It humanizes him as well.
Well even if he was a convict he was still a professional in his field. Just like many murderers who where perhaps lawyers, doctors, mechanics.
The film has a gift for humanizing otherwise intimidating people. The prisoners and the guards both start off as off-putting yet they all have their softer, more vulnerable sides exposed by the end.
It helps that it shows that most of the guards are decent folk it's just the head guy who's a nut.
@@Igarappappa and his goon Hadley
@@mustofamiah8549 Hadley wasn't as bad as the Warden I think he was just corrupted by him and following orders. He still scratched Andy's back after he got beaten by the Sisters.
Warden Norton's brains being one of them.
@marius3875
This. Andy was his cash cow.
This is my favourite movie of all time. Just a masterpiece
ua-cam.com/video/vGprOcs0Nlo/v-deo.html
And yet, there is nothing, cinematically, impressive about it. One icon shot. Just the pure strength of storytelling and acting.
@@happygoluckyscamp You mean camera angles and lighting and stuff?
Shawshank is my second favourite movie of all time, next to Pulp Fiction. Love both to death.
@@happygoluckyscamp and narration
"I'm a convicted murderer who provides sound financial planning" out of context is lowkey hilarious. Just another great line to appreciate from this masterpiece.
I'm glad someone here pointed out this line. You're absolutely right that it's lowkey hilarious
It Was Nice To See Him Admit It
Too bad Red's comment was left out of this clip. 'Got you out of the laundry, didn't it'. Classic!
This movie, especially when a guards asked his advise on setting up trust fund, inspired me to become an accountant in 1995. I took a diploma in accountancy course then. This shows, if you have a set of skill, you will be respected, wherever you are.
Did you do tax to a guard already ?
I hope it didn’t also inspire you to kill your wife.
@chandllerburse737 I finished my accountancy degree, but i worked as an IT guy till retired in 2021.
Proverbs 22:29 Do you see a man diligent and skillful in his business? He will stand before kings; he will not stand before obscure men
Education will pay you back in many ways dear...
- mother
So true!!!
💘
Not if you get a gender studies degree.
@@GabrielNicho that’s not education, it’s a waste of time.
@@g0679 both types of education, each work better for different people.
I love how the wardens being a little helpful to andy as his taxes are done and even worrying slightly. Love how it humanized him and the guards
And then he does some terrible shit instantly making him the enemy again
that last line from Andy, "Hey Red, can you hand me a stack of 1040's?" i love that. may as well have been in a bank.
What's 1040's please?
@@harukatakahashi8822 US Inland Revenue taxation forms for individuals
@@ozodyssey5528 oh, thankies x3
The warden would have to make sure he had all the right documents so he could do his work properly
I just noticed when red narrates this, he goes through years like nothing. “Year after that” and “year after that”. It’s kinda sad to remember how much of Andy’s life was taken away for something he didn’t do. But it doesn’t hit you until about twenty years in, before he finally breaks free.
True And I Think He Got Raped At Least 25 Or 30 Times According To The Book, Some Of Them Were Downright Violent Too
Yep
My whole life been way im used it I guess u can say and there nothing I want I can achieve or gain through working or skill so I can only work for other goals and pray for mine
Ya know who else did twenty years in the can? Uncle Philly Leotardo
Fun fact: Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Paul Newman, Gene Hackman, Robert Redford and Robert Duvall were considered for the part of Red. In the original novel, Red is a middle-aged white Irishman with graying red hair. However, Frank Darabont always had Morgan Freeman in mind for the role, because of his authoritative presence, demeanor, and deep voice. Red's reply, "Maybe it's because I'm Irish," to Andy's inquiry about his nickname was kept in the film as a joke.
And honestly could you imagine anyone else narrating this? Like the scene before this, "We sat on the roof with the sun on our shoulders and felt like free men." Just perfect.
Its Morgan Freeman's narration that elevates this movie from great to perfection.
he brings a deep sombre tone, and really evokes the feelings he speaks. You can really feel Red's deep sorrow and regretfulness about his life. I don't think any other actor could come close.
This is a perfect example of a race swap being beneficial because the perfect man for the role was Morgan...not to score woke points.
I can really picture Redford playing him, but yes, Freeman's narration elevated the movie. I wouldn't have it any other way.
I am Korean and I haven't fully understood why they need Andy to do their taxes until I came to the US and do my taxes for the first time.
Now I have to look for Andy every single year.
Until you watch Young Sheldon and realize it takes a genious to get well versed in the tax code.
The fact that they call it code, instead of rules says it all.
😂😂😂😂
@@Dirk-van-den-Berg Turbo Tax does a pretty good job at making it easy for you to do your own taxes. And it is free.
I swear ive seen this thousands of times growing up and only now can I truly appreciate Andys hustle.
This scene inspired me so much that I got my accounting degree and deliberately went to prison so I could do taxes for all the guards. I just got out after 20 years AMA
How's Zihuatenejo this time of year?
Man, with his skills no one in prison would touch him. XD
Hadley made sure no one did
Bogg did, you know what happened to him
@@bizybliztaverage9414 they needed someone to make the mistake of 'volunteering' to be an example to the rest what happens when you touch him XD
I wouldn't say Boggs 'volunteered' he wanted to do it because he's a scumbag rapist. Though after that if anyone laid a finger on Andy I'm guessing Hadley would have killed them instead of just leaving them permanently disabled and drinking the rest of their food through a straw.
Boggs got the beating of a lifetime 😂😂😂 word was out after that: Andy was a made man, and Boggs wasn't.
What a cinematic masterpiece!
- An absolutely fantastic movie from start to finish: The stellar acting from Freeman and Robins, the phenomenal script and incredible direction from Darabont, hauntingly beautiful score from Newman and the gorgeous cinematography of Deakins - not to forget Stephen King's amazing novel as the source material..
God damn I love this movie so much..
One of my favorite scenes in the film.
Thing to remember is, having an accountant who can put all your ducks in a row to maximize your money, that's a thing only rich men get, or at least upper-middle class.
Prison guards were- still are - predominantly blue collar. Andy is opening up a whole other world to them.
What an interesting comment, thank!!
Well said
Great point ! He was definitely a golden goose.
Quite literally blue collar...I'll show myself out
@@TheSuspectOnFoot well, for an extra touch, you can see that Hadley (the Captain) has a white shirt on!
I personally would love to be a banker/accountant like Andy, but alas, my brain doesn’t like math. But hey, at least I can draw very well 😒
I know the feeling. I took an accounting course in college (for some reason) and I was terrible at it.
I'm studying to be an accountant. Ironically I wish I could draw better
Art has its own expression no shame in that, you got it flaunt it. The world becomes a little less grey with the addition of a new artist, every time.
In a sense, math is a form of drawing, it is merely a matter how one looks at it.
Math is just a subject you need to spend a lot of time with and repetition is key. But most people are too lazy to put the time in.
Me when I get 2 math questions right in a row in 1st grade:
THIS NEVER GET'S OLD
Oh my goodness. I've watched this movie so many times. Best of all time.
This, Gladiator and Return Of The Jedi are my three all time favorite movies.
Nice list
Imagine coming back the year after Andy escaped.
Guard: yea I’m here to do my taxes.
New warden: Andy escaped, the last warden shot himself, and the old guard is practicing sodomy.
Guard: okayyy... guess I’ll go to H&R Block.
okay then, say hi to the old guard for me then.
There’s no way Hadley went to prison.
Nah, not much different at the block either lol
@@OBroIchain I think so. The state would’ve been prey embarrassed over the whole thing and wouldn’t risk going easy on him as further PR disaster would follow.
You can't fool us with this thinly veiled ad, good day to you sir.
Was searching for this thanks
I just realized Deakins is probably named after the film’s cinematographer, Roger Deakins
I've been looking for this scene for a while. Thanks!
Andy played the long game. Also he did something that would keep himself occupied while serving time. Time and nothing to do is dangerous to your health.
Yep me rn time nothing do
Once a banker always a banker
in real life, every perv and bad guy in that prison would've left Andy alone the minute he helped out Hadley with his windfall. And then after this? Forget it. Him and his crew are UNTOUCHABLE. I mean to the point where cons would be doing them favors and protecting them. To say nothing of the extra privileges they'd all get; good work assignments, food, women, a beer once and a while you name it. The prison would be pretty orderly actually. Oh, Red was helping Andy with the taxes 2-3 months out of the year with that many guards.
@BethHarmon-uv7tl Andy's rep would've been established LONG before that. And definitely Bogs's buddies would've gotten the same treatment from Hadley LOL.
Eh, women is a bit much
Amazing scene
I'm about to watch this whole movie, 3 min clip at a time- lol
I love this scene. Just a complete and total classic movie.
Great scene
Damn it, I love this movie. Every scene is memorable. Andy's sentencing, Red's parole rejection(s), the tax scene, all of it. As close to perfect as it gets.
Guards from other prisons in '67:
What happened to that guy who does our taxes?
Hahaha
How awesome is that. You and a best mate working together while in prison getting extra privileged like they most like deserved.
You can take the banker out of the bank
But you can't take the bank out of the banker
One of the best movies i ever seen.
Just think, Deakins was setting up a trust fund for Truman before he was even born.
Birth of a legend.
i near soiled myself ... 😅
Like how it's casually said
'Year after that'
He was in prison for 14 years, so that mean this was a yearly thing. Talk about the guards and warden being spoiled rotten
@@atiashaunbaker3792 they mentioend andy was in shawshank from 1947 to 1966 so 19 years. we know later on in the movie by th 1950s or early 1960s andy was already helping the warden embezzle money by that point in time. would he even have time to still do the taxes for the other guards.
One year is nothing once you're past middle age.
"The guards on the opposing teams all remembered to bring their W2s."
1:35 Richie Aprile in the can!
Beansie never came to visit.
“jiggly hooligal” is an amazing term
This is one reason why they beat Bogs half to death, after he beat up Andy. The Guards and the other Prisoners like him a lot and he is extremely useful to them.
❤❤❤❤
Andy is the shit
I think initially Andy thought he might be in for a beating for no reason, then had to get himself together mentally after realizing that was not what he was there for.
Best movie ever
I ❤️ this sequence
Brooks was laughing at the end
I always think of this scene during tax season.
The power of knowledge.
the cinematography in that scen is just astonashing
Best movie of all time
H&R block in your local penitentiary. Courtesy of Dufresne.
Why the warden didn't put Andy in maximum protection at this point was silly. That would have kept Boggs and the Sister's off him.
I think by this scene Hadley had already deleted the hell out of Boggs lol
@@zachsmart8569 😂😂😂🤣😂.. Deleted huh???
@@atiashaunbaker3792 lmao
i think an issue was that the guards didnt make it clear which inmates they can touch or cna't touch obviously to avoid favoritism but there are inmates probably stupid enough to not get the memo and carry it out.
Yeah I'm not sure if Boggs had beaten him within an inch of his life at the time of this scene continuity wise. It would have been around that time, but not sure if before or after. As for getting the word out, I have no idea how a prison operates to tell inmates to keep your hands off this prisoner. Like I suppose if Andy told the Warden or Hadley about the Sisters to keep their hands off Andy it may have worked, but Boggs was pretty stupid.
I do taxes for a living, I find this scene so funny. LoL
The IRS will put fear even into the hearts of even the most sinister of wardens and murderous of prison guards. 😂
love this and Green Mile. 👍
Its important to have a transferrable skill.
Dang paper sounded extra papery when you handled it back in the day
It was thinner
Taxes man is t bring people together
Such a good movie
Lol not to be the downer here but love how they fix finance with accounting… two different things guys !! Wait till I tell the fellas about this oh boy
Richie is right there thinking about Janice and the jaaacket
I will never say prison wasn't food foe me.
Shawshank redemption is not a prison movie. Its deep theme is related to Bible. Say, Andy is Jesus, Norton is a fatherly figure and Hadely is a Satan.
Fear helds you prisoner, hope sets you free is the most perfect line that explains the psychological aspect of human morale.
i've always wondered would these guards have so many complicated things to file for taxes?
i mean w2 that's obvious.
maybe some 1099 from banks for interest earned.
that's all i can really tihnk of on the passive side.
unless they 're all investing in something like stocks or bonds or they got side businesses. but don't they work long hours would they even have time to do all that other stuff.
The way I see it is Andy is basically doing the hard part for them, they just need to file it in time.
@@minhajnizam5090 i don't know how it was in teh 1950s but obviously today you just get all the 1099s in the mail from the instittuion you got money with or the place you made money at.
@@joeswanson733don't know then I'm not not from USA so we don't do our taxes ourself
I’m 27. This scene makes me want to go to college to be an accountant or go to banking.
I once watched an episode of kids meet. Where they met former criminals. One of them said he learned he liked to write so he wrote books. Sometimes you need some time to focus.
How fuckin incredible is this movie
In hindsight, this is also what likely informed Andy of everyone's activities. You can tell a lot about someone by their finances and Andy was in deep with the Warden and more or less had the read on him when he was planning his escape. He had to make sure that the Warden couldn't actually check his investments in the window that he escaped. The funny part is that the Warden more or less didn't catch on to the heist until the time of his demise because he only just found the bible when it showed up in the news.
Little did He know what He was getting Himself into.
Man should good at numbers.
"Mr Deakins". Roger Deakins was dir. of photog. Easter egg, I guess.
Andy's co inmates making fun of his tax skills when he was convicted of murder.
Dude he's murderer not a tax evader or con man
😘😘😘
Dvd는 계속 나옵니다 ????
Didn't know Richie Aprille did twenny years in the can?.
How would the guard write off his gun + holster as tax deductable? Ya he had to pay for the gun + holster himself, but that means the prison would have to issue him a receipt as proof of payment right?
I dunno.
They would have if he paid the money. It's not like it was done under the table. He had to purchase the weapon and holster for the purpose of doing his job, that makes it a business expense.
브룩스 너무 좋아
I find it funny how the warden is worrying about his taxes when later on at the end of the movie he just shoots himself I mean it seems kinda pointless now
too bad Ritchie Aprile couldn't have had Andy do some money cooking for him so that when he got out of prison, he wouldn't have had to take orders from Tony Soprano
So the guards do not trust the ppl outside and they prefer someone in the inside to do their taxes ?
There were corruptions inside the prison, so yes that's one half of the reason.
The other reason is because Andy was setting their tax practically for free, which saves them a lot of money.
In the US, there's company do your taxes and charge you for it. It is a loss situation for the guards.
@@brahmantyoihsan5938 i think you'd have to be higher up to really see kickbacks and such. obviously the rank and file may have set up some gravy trains for themselves but i think the free tax services would definitely be the biggest draw. you have a free CPA in house.
@@joeswanson733 Well, yeah, especially since a man of Andy's education wouldn't normally find themselves in prison.
But having a CPA do your taxes in exchange for giving him a little more freedom and safety? Those guards should be wearing colors themselves if only because they were too cheap to buy Andy a chessboard.
Is not about the trust is about the cost
😍😍😍😍
🎉
Doing the warden's taxes.
Andy's got him where it really hurts (and counts).
His taxes!
이거는 올레 tv 역시
DISNEY dvd
Ha ha 😂
Great movie.
I hope he got a little booze a woman and other things on the side from the guards
I make starwars clips
I love Andy and how he explains things as well as plan out things (as seen throughout the film and especially its ending lol). Seeing this movie makes me want to relive the moment I watched it.
As i watched this scene, im kinda thinking maybe some guards actually help Andy escape that priscon, not all of them but maybe 1 or 2 prison guard